Uganda leader says army killed warriors in clashes

Reuters, 14 September 1999

KAMPALA, Sept 14 (Reuters) - President Yoweri Museveni acknowleged on
Tuesday
his troops had opened fire on and killed a significant number of tribal
warriors in an effort to stop ethnic clashes in eastern Uganda last week.

The army said on Monday that up to 400 people had died in three days of
ethnic fighting between pastoralist communities, and said it was forced to
step in to quell the clashes.

But the independent Monitor newspaper said survivors blamed 300 of the
deaths
on indiscriminate firing on the area by the army from helicopter gunships.

"It is true we killed quite a bit of those people, but they were armed
warriors," Museveni told a news conference. "I don't know how many they
killed but they were warriors."

An army source told Reuters about 100 people had been killed by government
soldiers.

The clashes began when Bakora ethnic warriors from the Karimojong group
attacked the rival Matheniko group from the same Karimojong tribe last
Thursday in the Kalosarich area, some 250 km (150 miles) east of the capital
Kampala.

Museveni said the initial raid came in revenge for a similar attack last
month. The army earlier said at least 40 people died in the August raid, but
one aid group said around 160 were now known to have died.

Museveni said the army had moved in with helicopters and armoured vehicles
to
end the fighting.

He also said the army had launched a separate operation against a different
Karimojong community on September 9 after warriors ambushed a military
convoy
in July, stealing weapons and ammunition. He said 26 of the "ringleaders"
had been arrested and a lot of arms and 250 cows recovered.

"We are continuing the operation," he said.

Cattle rustling is common in the remote area where the fighting took place.

It is made more violent by the availability of assault rifles, which came
into circulation after the overthrow of dictator Idi Amin in 1979 and are
also available as a result of a long-running civil war in neighbouring
Sudan.